The evolutionist
explains that life began in some primordial sea. According to the Russian scientist
Oparin, life began in an atmosphere of methane, ammonia, hydrogen, and water vapor.
Electrical discharges coming through this atmosphere created the first building blocks of
life -- amino acids. An experiment performed by Stanley Miller, for which he won the Nobel
Prize, placed this type of atmosphere in his laboratory, generated electrical sparks and
produce amino acids. Though far from being life, amino acids are the basic building blocks
of living cells, and from them other developments could ultimately produce the first cell.
This would be like having a fraction of one brick in the corner of a fifty story building
(considering the building as the cell). It is a long way from the whole, but evolutionists
insist that it represents a step in our understanding of how life began.

Interestingly, however, the suns rays penetrating through an
atmosphere of methane, ammonia, hydrogen, and water vapor would destroy any amino acids to
depth of fifteen meters in the ocean. Amino acids formed in the upper atmosphere would
quickly disintegrate again. The way to prevent that is to add oxygen to the atmosphere. If
there is oxygen in the atmosphere, ozone (° 3) will form; but the ozone filters out the ultra-violet, which is so lethal
that it could kill almost every form of life on the planet, even penetrating as much as 30
feet under the surface of the oceans. With the addition of oxygen the ultra-violet light
from the sun is filtered out and amino acids are no longer destroyed.